Review: These are the hottest topics of the 36th calendar week 2021 on Videogameszone

Review: These are the hottest topics of the 36th calendar week 2021 on Videogameszone

Review

Also in the week of 05.09. Until September 12th, 2021 many articles worth reading have been published, which we have put together for you. The selection is made automatically by the system based on the number of hits, so it is not influenced by the editorial team. So you won't miss a hot topic:

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GTA 5: New trailer for the technically improved version for PS5 and Xbox Series X / S (video)

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God of War Ragnarök : Trailer shows the first gameplay scenes for the new Kratos adventure (video)



During the same period, of course, news appeared that were also discussed in the community (108 news with 19 comments). The most read news of the past week:

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God of War Ragnarök: Trailer shows the first gameplay scenes for the new Kratos adventure, GTA 5: New trailer for the technically improved version for PS5 and Xbox Series X. / S and much more. - The most popular videos of the day

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Daily Deals • Alternate (including Kingston FURY Beast RGB 32 GB kit DDR4-3600 € 134.90, FURY Beast RGB 16 GB kit DDR4-3200 64, € 90 and ASUS VG279Q1A 165 Hz € 229.90) • WD Blue SN550 NVMe 1 TB € 71.99 • Amazon: September Deals • Sharkoon Skiller SGS40 € 234.89 • ASUS VivoBook S17 i3 / 512 GB € 499 [Promotion]

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Review: These are the hottest topics of the 36th calendar week 2021 on Videogameszone (3 comments)






‘Road whisperer’

Noah Allison, who was appointed to a trustee vacancy on the Yellow Creek Township board of trustees two years ago, stands next to a John Deere side boom mower acquired for the road department since he has been on board. He hopes that voters elect him to the seat during November’s general election. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)


WELLSVILLE — Yellow Creek Township has some of the best roads in Columbiana County, and some of that is due to Noah Allison, who is seeking his initial elected office.


He hopes to hold off a challenge from Elmer J. McBane, who is seeking to snag one of two trustee seats from either Allison or Allison’s father Mark in November.


When the opportunity to fill a board vacancy, serving alongside his father surfaced, Allison said that he jumped at the opportunity.


A graduate of Wellsville High School in 2011, Allison comes from a community-minded family. Allison Construction, his company that is known for being strong in road construction, donates a lot of equipment and time to assure that township roads are strong, he explained.


With that goal in mind, he has made it his personal mission to be Yellow Creek Township’s so-called “Road Whisperer.” If there is a deteriorating road (especially due to culvert failure), Allison works with Columbiana County officials and the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) to fix it.


“We have improved 29 roads (15 miles of road total), some in stages. When redoing the roads, we fix culverts, berms and do any necessary drainage work. I can jump in and assist with maintenance as needed, especially with downed trees and snow removal,” he said.


Coming up, Yellow Creek Township is working with ODOT to upgrade storm sewers on Esterly Street and will continue with road improvements.


“We have a good road crew, and trustees have a strong relationship with them,” he said.


Keeping them in new equipment and using Allison’s relationships to shop vendors helps with the cause. For example, since he has been with the board, trustees have purchased a new 5500 utility truck with a snowplow, a Case 580 backhoe and a John Deere sideboom mower.


Since snow removal is such a big part of road department operations, trustees recently bought an additional acre to expand its salt storage area next to its township administration building.


Pandemic money also gave them the unique opportunity to help the people who help Yellow Creek Township residents. They were able to not only disperse funds to both of the fire departments — Highlandtown and Wellsville volunteer — that split the proceeds of their fire levy funds to service the township, township businesses and non-profits also received Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), but were also able to improve their own township building.


“We were able to upgrade our township offices, add some equipment washer and put in a new HVAC system with filtration system,” he continued.


The township also saw an additional $150,000 in revenue, after instituting a new permit road bond process with all the new construction using township roads like the Southfield energy project. The new natural gas-fired plant is expected to bring $5 million in revenue to the township and currently is at 85 percent completion. However, he is quick to not take credit for that.


“I was on the tail end of that project,” Allison added.


Allison makes his home with wife Alexa, who is an administrator for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


sujhelyi@reviewonline.com


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